“…Among these young Alu elements, approximately 25% have inserted so recently that they are polymorphic among different human population groups, families, or even individuals with respect to their presence or absence in the genome (Batzer and Deininger, 2002). Because Alu insertions are unique events that are identical bydescent, they have been useful in genetic mapping and population genetics studies (Batzer et al, 1994;Batzer and Deininger, 1991;Perna et al, 1992;Roy-Engel et al, 2001;Salem et al, 2003;Stoneking et al, 1997;Tishkoff et al, 2000) Alu markers have been used extensively for population structure and evolution, both at global (Bazter et al 1996;Romualdi et al 2002;Bamshad et al 2003) and regional levels (Majumder et al 1999;Comas et al 2000Comas et al , 2004de Pancorbo et al 2001;Nasidze et al 2001;Ennafaa et al 2006;Bahri et al 2008;Frigi et al 2010a). The objective of this study is to compare the genetic structure of some North African populations with respect to the other populations of North Africa, Western, Eastern and Central Europe, by using MDS and AMOVA methods.…”